Larsh v. Boyle

36 Colo. 18
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1906
DocketNo. 4660
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 36 Colo. 18 (Larsh v. Boyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larsh v. Boyle, 36 Colo. 18 (Colo. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. .Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an action by appellant Larsh, as plaintiff below, to recover a certain interest in the Neglected mine and certain unpatented mining locations, and for an accounting of the business of a mining co-partnership. Trial to the court without a jury resulted in findings for defendants, and the action was dismissed. The plaintiff is here with his appeal.

[21]*21Plaintiff’s claim of an interest in the mining locations rests npon an entirely different foundation from that on which he bases his rights in the Neglected mine. Our examination of the record leads to the conclusion that the trial court was right in deciding that the plaintiff had failed to establish his claim to an interest in these locations, and -in that respect its judgment will be affirmed. Further discussion, therefore, is directed to the controversy over the Neglected mine.

A summary of the pertinent parts of the pleadings and the responsive evidence, in connection with the various questions argued by counsel, will best present the' nature of this controversy. From the complaint it appears that in March, 1901, Gaines and Andrews owned this property. They then gave a written bond and lease of it to the defendant W. J. Boyle. This instrument was dual in character. It included an ordinary mining lease, and a naked option to purchase; the former mutual, the latter unilateral. One of the conditions of the title bond was that if Boyle paid the aggregate sum of $10,000 in several payments and at certain designated times, the owners would convey to him the mine. The first three payments of $2,000 each were to be made respectively on or before July 15, 1901, October 15, 1901, and July 15,1902, and $4,000 on or before May 1, 1903. Before the maturity of the first payment, in consideration of the payment of $100, Boyle secured from the owners an extension of one month for the payment of the balance of $1,900. Soon after the bond and lease was executed, Boyle assigned an undivided one-half of his interest therein to the defendant Dennison. About the 9th of July, 1901, Boyle and Dennison assigned an undivided half interest in the bond and lease to the plaintiff Larsh and defendant Gorman — defendant Rivers, to the [22]*22knowledge of all the parties, being interested with Gorman — upon the consideration that the assignees should pay the entire purchase price of $10,000 a.t the times designated in the title bond, and, with the assignors, perform its other conditions to which Boyle had pledged himself under his agreement with Gaines and Andrews. These allegations of the complaint are admitted by the answer. Up to this point, therefore, there is no dispute between the parties. The plaintiff in his complaint alleges, and by his evidence attempted to show, that in legal effect, and so far as his assignors Boyle and Dennison are concerned, he made the first payment of $1,900 due on the bond August 15,1901, and the second payment of October 15, and complied with the other conditions of the agreement to be by him performed up to the time this action was begun, and therefore, he maintains that the interests he thereby obtained should be protected.

In the answer the execution of the assignment by Boyle and Dennison to Larsh and Gorman was admitted, but there was a denial that the instrument was ever delivered, and an affirmative allegation, to which the defendants testify, that the instrument, though duly executed and acknowledged by all of the parties except Dennison, was not to be delivered or become binding until Dennison acknowledged, the same, and until Larsh and Gorman paid all the purchase money, neither of which conditions was ever complied with. There was a denial, also, that Larsh had done or performed any of the things which he agreed to do under the terms of the assignment.

It was alleged in the answer and admitted by plaintiff that practically contemporaneously with the assignment to Larsh and Gorman the four parties interested in the bond and lease, Boyle, Dennison, Larsh and Gorman, entered into a mining copartner[23]*23ship under the name of the Neglected Mining Company for the purpose of working the mine under the lease. The answer avers that the company continued this work up to about the middle of October, 1901, when it was ascertained that the mine had run behind, and the mining company was indebted for labor and material in a large sum of money; and that Larsh, finding himself unable to comply with his agreement, orally agreed with his copartners to withdraw from the company and renounce all of his rights under the lease and option and all of his interest in the mine, and the other parties thereupon formally declared a forfeiture of his rights, in which he acquiesced, and thereupon he severed his connection with the copartnership and surrendered his interest in the subject-matter of the bond. To this alleged voluntary yielding up of Larsh’s rights, all of the defendants testify, though Larsh denies it. .With this brief summary of the pleadings and evidence, most of which is applicable alike to all the points discussed in the opinion, we now proceed to a consideration of the general propositions argued by counsel, where will be'found such additional statement of the contents of the pleadings and evidence as pertain to the several questions involved.

1. We are constrained to hold that the deed of assignment was delivered. Defendants admit there was a delivery of the instrument to one of the grantees, but claim that it was conditional. The doctrine is elementary that there can he no conditional delivery or delivery in escrow, by the grantor to the grantee in a deed. Such conditional delivery must be to a stranger, and not to a party to the transaction. Here, according to defendants, the delivery was made to Rivers, one of the grantees, though his name did not appear in the instrument. In addition to this, the evidence is that both Larsh and Grorman at different [24]*24times had possession of the instrument with the knowledge of the assignors Boyle and Dennison, and the proof is also clear that there was no agreement, to which Larsh or Gorman assented, such as defendants allege, that the instrument was not to be delivered until it was acknowledged by Dennison, and until payment of the purchase money. The conduct of all the parties speaks ydth a force that admits of no contradiction. It shows that every one of them understood that the deed had been delivered. Contemporaneously with its execution the parties formed a mining copartnership and entered upon the work of the development of the mine in accordance with the very terms of the deed itself. By word and conduct they treated it as a perfected and delivered instrument, and defendants cannot now be heard to assert the contrary.

2. One of the grounds discussed at length by appellant is that Larsh, by the instrument of assignment, acquired an interest in the Neglected lode which was real estate, and that such interest could not, under the statute of frauds, be waived, released, or abandoned by parol or verbal agreement. Whether till acceptance, or part or full performance, by the holder of a naked option to purchase, an interest in real estate is created, we need not decide. Our statute of frauds, however, does not include a surrender or abandonment by operation of law.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Colo. 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larsh-v-boyle-colo-1906.